Govt pledges next steps on plastic waste
Govt pledges next steps on plastic waste
The Government will phase out
more single-use plastics following the success of its
single-use plastic bag ban earlier this year and the release
today of a pivotal report for dealing with waste.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has welcomed the Rethinking Plastics in Aotearoa New Zealand report, released by her Chief Science Advisor Prof Juliet Gerrard.
“Our ban on plastic bags has already made a difference as we confront our enormous long-term challenge to tackle plastic waste,” Jacinda Ardern said.
“Many New Zealanders, including many children, write to me about plastic – concerned with its proliferation over the past decade and the mounting waste ending up in our oceans.
“I share this concern for our natural environment – one that sustains our tourism, trade and our national identity.
“There’s more to do and our next steps to tackle plastic waste include:
•
Setting goals to shift away from low-value and
hard-to-recycle plastic
• Our first target will
be to move away from single-use packaging and beverage
containers made of hard-to-recycle PVC and polystyrene.
Examples include polystyrene meat trays, cups and takeaway
food containers. We will work towards ensuring that these
are made of high-value alternatives like PET, HDPE and
polypropylene, which can be recycled and reprocessed
•
Stimulate innovation and development of solutions to the
soft plastic problem
• Accelerate work with local
government and industry on better and more consistent
kerbside collection of recyclables
• With
industry, continue work to develop a labelling scheme for
packaging, including plastic packaging
“We can ensure that New Zealand’s future is not full of throw-aways but of smart innovations and practical steps to reduce, reuse and recycle,” Jacinda Ardern said.
Associate Minister for the Environment Eugenie Sage said the report reaffirms and extends the Government’s ambitious plan to reduce waste, which includes:
•
A container return scheme for drink bottles and cans
•
Regulated product stewardship schemes for tough waste issues
such as e-waste, tyres and batteries
•
A National Resource Recovery work programme in response to
China and other countries’ bans on importing waste and
recyclables
• Improving waste
data
• Expanding and improving the
landfill levy to help fund more ways to recover, re-use and
reprocess materials
• A $40 million
Provincial Growth Fund investment to turn plastic waste into
useful material for businesses and consumers.
“New Zealanders often tell me how concerned they are about the amount of plastics ending up in our oceans and harming fish, marine mammals, seabirds, and turtles,” Eugenie Sage said.
“A lot of this plastic waste doesn’t need to be created in the first place.
“Our goal must be to make Aotearoa an economy where plastic rarely becomes waste or pollution. As Prof Gerrard says there is no silver bullet and we need a systems change. The recommendations in this report will help us to achieve this.
“I aim to have the full Government response to the Rethinking Plastics report confirmed within six months,” Eugenie Sage said.
Since the 1950s, 8.3 billion tonnes of
plastic has been produced globally and nearly 80 per cent of
that has gone to the dump or been discarded in the
environment. Some 36 per cent of plastic produced today is
single-use packaging.
Key recommendations from Rethinking Plastics in Aotearoa New Zealand:
1. Implement a National Plastics Action
Plan
An overarching recommendation to guide
Aotearoa New Zealand’s transition to a circular economy
for plastics.
2. Improve plastics data
collection
A series of recommendations to fill
known knowledge gaps and develop measures to coordinate and
standardise data collection on plastics to guide
decision-making.
3. Embed rethinking plastics
in the government agenda
A series of
recommendations that address opportunities for government to
demonstrate best practice, ensure efforts to mitigate issues
related to plastics are enduring, and collaborate
internationally on these issues.
4. Create
and enable consistency in design, use and
disposal
A series of recommendations to keep
plastics in circulation through improved recycling systems
and sector-specific approaches to rethinking plastics.
5.
Innovate and amplify
A series of
recommendations related to research and innovation for
plastics.
6. Mitigate environmental and
health impacts of plastics
A series of
recommendations to fill knowledge gaps and support ongoing
research on the impacts of plastics.
The report can be found here.